Behavioral Interventions & Support Plans: Best Practices for Educators

Understanding Behavior as Communication

A therapist listens intently to a client who is speaking animatedly while holding a phone in a bright, modern office with a large plant and window.

In special education, behavior is rarely random. More often, it is a form of communication — a student’s way of expressing unmet needs, frustration, sensory overload, anxiety, or a lack of skills to navigate a situation. When educators view behavior through this lens, the focus shifts from “How do we stop this?” to “What is this student trying to tell us?”

Effective behavior support begins with understanding:

  • Why behaviors occur – identifying the function behind the behavior, such as seeking attention, avoiding a task, or responding to sensory input
  • What triggers them – recognizing patterns, environments, or situations that lead to challenging behavior
  • How to teach replacement behaviors – explicitly teaching students appropriate ways to communicate needs, manage emotions, or request support
  • How to create supportive environments – adjusting classroom structure, expectations, or routines to reduce stress and increase success

Proactive approaches are far more effective than reactive discipline. When students feel understood and supported, challenging behaviors often decrease, and engagement, trust, and learning increase.

Best Practices in Behavior Support

High-quality behavior intervention is intentional, structured, and data-driven. Rather than relying on punishment or guesswork, effective educators use evidence-based practices to guide their decisions.

Best practices in behavior support include:

  • Functional Behavior Assessments: FBAs help educators identify the purpose a behavior serves for a student. Understanding the “why” behind a behavior is essential to creating an intervention that actually works.
  • Positive Behavior Intervention Plans: BIPs outline proactive strategies, supports, and replacement behaviors tailored to the student. These plans focus on skill building, not just behavior reduction.
  • Consistent data collection and monitoring: Data allows educators to track progress, identify patterns, and adjust interventions when needed. It removes guesswork and supports informed decision-making.
  • Collaboration with families and support staff: Behavior support is most effective when it is consistent across environments. Partnering with families, paraprofessionals, therapists, and administrators strengthens implementation and outcomes.
  • Ethical and culturally responsive approaches: Behavior interventions must respect students’ dignity, cultural backgrounds, and individual identities. Ethical practice ensures that supports are supportive, not punitive, and that students are treated with respect.

Together, these practices create behavior support systems that are compassionate, effective, and sustainable — supporting not just behavior change, but overall student well-being.

How Kent State Teaches Behavior Support

Kent State University’s online Master of Education in Special Education emphasizes preparing educators to design and implement behavior supports that are both effective and respectful. Students are trained to move beyond surface-level strategies and develop interventions grounded in research, ethics, and collaboration.

Through coursework, students learn to:

  • analyze behavior using evidence-based frameworks
  • design FBAs and BIPs that are individualized and purposeful
  • make ethical decisions in complex situations
  • collaborate effectively with multidisciplinary teams
  • use data to evaluate and refine intervention strategies

Faculty bring real-world experience into the classroom, helping students connect theory to practice and navigate the realities of behavior support in schools. This prepares graduates to approach behavior challenges with confidence, clarity, and compassion.

Why Online Learning Enhances Behavior Practice

Online learning is uniquely suited to behavior-focused professional development because it allows educators to remain fully embedded in their practice while they learn.

Online coursework allows educators to:

  • Reflect on real classroom experiences and connect theory directly to what they are seeing with students
  • Discuss cases and scenarios with peers from a variety of school settings, gaining new perspectives and strategies
  • Apply strategies immediately with students and evaluate what is working in real time
  • Receive feedback while in practice, strengthening implementation and confidence

Rather than learning in isolation, online study becomes a continuous cycle of learning, application, reflection, and refinement. This integration deepens understanding and leads to stronger, more sustainable behavior support practices.

About the online M.Ed. in Special Education at Kent State

Kent State’s online M.Ed. in Special Education equips educators to design, implement, and evaluate behavior supports grounded in research and best practice. The program supports advanced practice and leadership while maintaining flexibility for working professionals.

Dr. Wiley is a Professor of Special Education at Kent State University. His work focuses on special education policy, equity in identification and services, and supporting educators in using research-based academic and behavioral interventions.
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